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NYC COURSE ARCHIVE
1
Spring 2017
HOLY FOOLS: Performing the Irrational Imaginary………………………………………….. Alex Tartarsky
4
Eavesdropping for Dialogue: Embracing Transgression To Listen for What Goes Unsaid…. Rachel Lyon
5
Prophetic Activist Art: Strategies for a Spiritual Revolution………………………………….. Tom Block
6
Fall 2016
JUST LIKE THAT: Embodied Knowledge and Political Movement ………………………….... Rosza Daniel Lang/Levitsky
7
Wound Dwelling: Writing and Stitching the Survivor Body(ies)……………………………... Jennifer Patterson
8
Drawing and Knowledge..……………………………………………………………………….. Christine Garvey
9
Spring 2016
Experimental Nonfiction: The Self as Writing and Performance ………………………….…. Cory Tamler
10
Sci-Art: The Art-Science Continuum …………………………………………………………… Sally Bozzuto
11
Exploring the Dreamworld: Touching the Unconscious Source of Creativity ……………….. Sophie Traub & Lolo Haha
12
Fall 2015
Playing with Perception: Reconstructing the Theatrical Canon ……………………………… John Kurzynowski
13
Taking Buildings Down …………………………………………………………………………. David Bench
14
Spring 2015
Lower East Side Architecture: Re-desigining Essex Crossing………………………………… David Bench
15
Art and the Everyday …………………………………………………………………………… Magali Duzant and Jeanette Spicer
16
Instagram, Food Porn and the Aesthetics of Desire: A History of Photographing Dinner... Rebecca Robertson
17
2
Electronic Voices: The Physics of Sound………………………………………………………... David Sheinkopf
18
The Videopoem………………………………………………………………………………….. Ilana Simons
19
Democratic Body: What would the community think? ………………………………………... Eroca Nicols
20
Fall 2014
Race, Gender, Land Art…………………………………………………………………………... Park McArthur
21
The Phenomenology of Shoes…………………………………………………………………... Chris Moffett
22
Sensational Cinema: The Poetics of Experience in Film ………………………………………. John-Paul Bernbach & Heather von Rohr
23
Self Analysis Through Statistics: Attempting the Impossible ……………………………….... Nisse Greenberg
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Nonsense: An Applied Theory………………………………………………………………….. Sam Corbin
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Spring 2014
Cooking Creativity: The Egg ……………………………………………………………………. Kouri Killmeier & Julie Edwards
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Magical Storytelling in Film and Drawing …………………………………………………….. Juliana Cerqueira Leite & Josephine Decker
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The Magick Circumstantial ……………………………………………………………………... Alan Ramón Clinton
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Neuroaesthetics as Performance (or, This is Your Brain on Art)…………………………….. Adam Thompson
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Urban Drifting: Theory and Practice of the Dérive ……………………………………………. Chris Moffett
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Becoming Philosopher(s) ……………………………………………………………………….. Aaron Finbloom
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Mystics ………………………………………………………………………………………….... Benjamin Korta
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3
Fall 2013
Math: An Empowering Manipulation of Collective Perceptions of the Natural World… Nisse Greenberg
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Thinking through the Body-Subject: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology and the Alexander Technique …………………. Julie Edwards and Benjamin Korta
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Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy ………………………………………………………………... Lauren Siegel
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4
HOLY FOOLS: Performing the Irrational Imaginary
Spring 2017
Alexandra Tatarsky
A performance workshop interwoven with performances! Hysterical laughter politics to
re-energize you in these dismal times! Surreal psycho babble songs and conversations!
Together we will make and share performances and writings from the perspective of the clown,
the holy fool, the outsider, the bumbling truth-seeker. Through readings and embodied
experiments, we will take inspiration from myriad traditions and practices that engage gibberish
and ecstatic movement including Russian Futurist zaum poetry, Kabbalistic vision text, primitive
voice work, automatic writing, and Nuyorican lingulisualism. Drawing upon Lecoq clown pedagogy,
commedia dell’arte, and contemporary dance practice, we will undertake physical explorations
that access rage, despair, hunger, excitement, longing, and curiosity – and use these states to
create characters and performance pieces that respond to and affect the world we live in.
Our investigations will focus on the meeting point of word and body, shifting between text-based
and movement-based exercises to approach new modes of analysis and expression. To this end,
each class will include discussion, physical warm-ups, and generative writing assignments that
consider performance to be a form of research.
5
Eavesdropping for Dialogue:
Embracing Transgression To Listen for What Goes
Unsaid
Spring 2017
Rachel Lyon
George Saunders has said, “Bad dialogue is when A asks a question and B answers it.” Dialogue should be
two people “firing missiles past each other.” And well-written dialogue is “like poetry—it’s not functional,
but it looks good on the page and has a zinginess." Even our greatest writers have a complicated
relationship with dialogue. For years Zadie Smith didn't write dialogue at all, because Nabokov was
against it.
In this course, we'll analyze the power dynamics, performance, communication, confession,
(dis)functionality, and "zinginess" of organic and constructed dialogue from vastly different
sources—from Beckett to Gchat to the subway. We'll eavesdrop on ourselves, our friends, and strangers,
and read between the lines in our own conversations. We'll comb through the archives at StoryCorps,
and take a trip to see some improv comedy. And we'll practice the craft of writing great dialogue, from
"said-bookisms" to dialogue tags, direct address, and beyond.
Preliminary reading / listening list:
● Corydon (André Gide's), written in the style of a Socratic dialogue
● Krapp's Last Tape (Samuel Beckett)
● The Women (Clare Boothe Luce)
● Talk (Linda Rosenkrantz), a recently re-released "reality novel"
● Excerpts from Stephen King's On Writing and other texts on craft
● Our own Gchat conversations
● Recordings of verbal conversations
6
Prophetic Activist Art: Strategies for a Spiritual
Revolution
Spring 2017
Tom Block
Prophetic Activist Art: Strategies for a Spiritual Revolution is a seminar exploring how to build individual
art-activist projects. Over the course of the eight weeks, classes will include an introduction to the
specific aspects of the Prophetic Activist Art model (developed by Tom Block out of his own work, and
published as an art/activist manifesto in 2014), and then an exploration about how these ideas can be
applied to each artist and their endeavor.
The course will follow the specific model developed in the text, Prophetic Activist Art: Handbook for a
Spiritual Revolution (Centre for Human Ecology, Scotland, 2014). The seminar will explore the
motivations and strategies for each particular activist art project. It will then introduce artists to the
specific ideas of the model, including co-opting political, business and social energy; partnering with
non-profit groups; making liaisons with other artists; utilizing unusual exhibition and outreach methods;
“Machiavellian” activism; how to build a project from inception through completion; how to imagine and
successfully attain quantifiable activist goals and other specific aspects of a Prophetic Activist Art
intervention.
7
JUST LIKE THAT: Embodied Knowledge and Political
Movement
Fall 2016
Rosza Daniel Lang/Levitsky
Dancing (such as at parties and clubs, in the studio, on stage, or in ritual spaces) can be incredibly useful
to the work done in the struggle for social justice. In this course, we will take 'the choreography of social
movements' seriously, exploring what the embodied knowledge we already have can bring to street
actions, group decision-making, and more. From the 'defensive dancing' we use to protect ourselves and
our friends from harassment at clubs, to the kinds of full-body awareness that keeps a dance squad
synchronized, to the versatile variety of chain- and circle-dances, we hold more knowledge than we often
let ourselves believe. Our investigations will aim to help us articulate what our bodies already know, to
develop it as a way of getting concrete things done, and to pass that knowledge along more clearly. The
class will be a working laboratory. We will examine case studies from the streets and meeting-rooms of
NYC and beyond, to see what we can learn from the recent past. We will use a wide range of approaches
to draw out and cultivate our individual and collective knowledge, according to the different situations
and material we are working with in different sessions. Our toolkit will include exercises from theater,
dance, and somatic practices; playground games; and models from direct action and consensus
facilitation training.
One entry point will be street tactics for confrontational situations, which we will look at through
approaches from ACT UP to the Direct Action Network to Black Lives Matter. Another will be
non-verbal group communication and decision making, for which we'll work with improvisation
techniques and ensemble-building exercises. We'll also come closer to more conventional forms of
performance as we look at collaborative approaches to bodily presence in public space that trouble the
line between symbolic and material impact (through examples from Queer Nation to Reclaim the Streets
to Betty's Daughter). And we'll touch on somatic strategies for staying connected to ourselves and our
aims as we carry on with our work.
The only requirement is being ready to move, to think about moving, to talk about how we move together
in all our different bodies. Participants' own past experiences will be a key resource for the process, as
will reports back on the time we spend on dancefloors and at demonstrations during the run of the class.
All of this will enable us to gain facility in working with embodied knowledge - a form of understanding
that is often either ignored or taken for granted
8
Wound Dwelling:
Writing and Stitching the Survivor Body(ies)
Fall 2016
Jennifer Patterson
What is the physicality of a wound? What types of loss feel nearly impossible to come back from? Can we
dive into the wound, the loss: excavate and unearth it? In this class we will focus on survival and
survivorhood; what it looks and feels like to live beyond traumatic experiences. The dominant narratives
about the survivor body(ies)— oft pathologized as disembodied, disassociated and unwell— will be
turned on their heads. We can never actually leave our bodies, as hard as we might try (and as wise as we
are in our reasons for trying) and are therefore always already embodied. Too often survivors that are
also writers are told to not dwell in the trauma, that writing from personal and traumatic experience isn’t
“legitimate” writing.
Reading work by Arianne Zwartjes, Bhanu Kapil, CA Conrad, Amber Dawn, T Fleishmann, Kazim Ali (and
so many more) and working with theory and visual art (embroidery and performance artists) we will also
generate our own written body of work as we consider how embodied practice(s) (like writing and
stitching) can be utilized to support our writing from the body and through trauma. We will also work on
translating the writing into embroidery pieces and will use embroidery as an active meditation. A wound
as a word as a picture, giving shape to the energy rippling in a body after experiencing trauma(s)—
moving from skin to paper and fiber.
Note: “Wound Dwelling” is language drawn from Leslie Jamison’s work
9
Drawing and Knowledge Fall 2016 Christine Garvey
In this 8 session course, students will explore the practice of drawing as a powerful language of
questioning. We will locate this investigation within art history, looking at drawing's heritage as a tool to
examine, critique, appreciate and order our perceivable world, and in doing so, create space for
something wholly new. Class presentations and studio-based projects will introduce students to
drawing’s deeply interdisciplinary significance as a medium: from the first recorded marks of cave
paintings, to Galileo’s drawings of the moon, these examples and others will help us consider the uniquely
human impulse to draw what we perceive, and the meaningful questions that lay at the heart of our
creative practices.
Note: This is primarily a studio-based class. Students will work both in the sketchbook, and on larger
independent works as the semester progresses. For full syllabus, please contact
[email protected] or SMT.
10
Experimental Nonfiction: The Self as Writing and Performance Spring 2016 Cory Tamler
With demand for "true and shocking" narratives apparently at a peak, this course will ask participants to
explore alternative ways that personal lives, histories, and relationships can be used as creative material,
and what the reasons might be for doing so. Experimental, hybrid works of literary nonfiction and
memoir by Hilton Als, Chris Kraus, Maggie Nelson, Karl Ove Knausgaard, and Fernando Pessoa, and
performances that use their authors as material by She She Pop, Kara Walker, Carmelita Tropicana,
Nature Theater of Oklahoma, the Rude Mechs, Nick Vaughan and Jake Margolin, and the Ballhaus
Naunynstrasse are not memoir, documentary, journalism, or fiction. Though they experiment with a
variety of nonfictional and cross-genre techniques, what interests these authors most is what happens
when a creative work incorporates layers, versions, and fictionalizations of its author's self.
The artists mentioned above work across genres, disciplines, and media, and in this course, so will we.
Through texts, video excerpts, and group discussion, supplemented by short reading assignments outside
of class, class participants will encounter writers and artists who experiment with inserting themselves
into their own work. Performance and writing exercises that put some of the ideas we discuss as a group
into practice will also be an important part of the way we develop a vocabulary together. Our last several
meetings will focus more heavily on creative/artistic responses, giving participants the opportunity to
develop a final project in the medium of their choice.
Participants with any level of writing and performance experience are welcome; the course is designed
with an interdisciplinary group, representative of a wide range of backgrounds and experiences, in mind.
Image credit: She She Pop, Testament (photo by Doro Tuch)
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Sci-Art: The Art-Science Continuum
Spring 2016 Sally Bozzuto
In this course students will examine the relationship between science and the arts from past to present
day. A wide range of topics will be discussed including the cultural divide between the arts and sciences,
the history of this relationship and how it evolved into its present form; a history of technology and its
influence on art and vice versa from early history to the current digital age; biology, ecology, the human
body and their relation to
the arts and society. This course will examine these relationship exploring topics such as physics, bio-art,
cyber-culture, bio-ethics, hacktivisim, net art, new media, neurology, perception, cyborg theory, and the
post-human body.
Some of the scientist-artists we will engage with include Leonardo DaVinci, Ernst Haeckel, László
Moholy-Nagy, Wassily Kandinsky, Ray Kurtzweil, Natalie Jeremijenko, Eduardo Kac, and Mariko Mori.
The class is divided into five sections: Physics (light, sound, motion etc.), Bio-Art/Bio-Design, The Digital
Age, The Self and Society and The Future/Post-Everything + Review and Synthesis, culminating in
student presentations of their own work or a research topic of their choosing relating individual's
interests to the course's themes.
(Image credit: Brandon Ballangee, “DFA186 Hades”, 2012)
12
Exploring the Dreamworld: Touching the Unconscious Source of Creativity Spring 2016 Sophie Traub & Lolo Haha
What is beyond the You that you present to the world everyday? What is your unconscious saying that
you don’t hear? Join us as we explore the body as vehicle to the unconscious in the waking state through
the lens of Process Work—a depth psychology theory and set of techniques developed by Arnold Mindell
associated with transpersonal, somatic and post-Jungian psychologies. Over the course of eight
two-hour classes, we will delve into the origin of the impulse in the body, improvisational movement with
one another, authentic response in face-to-face exercises, and sensory exploration of tensions in the
body using the practices of Inner Work (from Process Work), Authentic Movement, Grotowski, Meisner,
Viewpoints, and Suzuki. Through this course, you will learn to notice and integrate the symbols and
sensations of your unconscious to find intuitive inspiration for life projects, strengthen your art-making
practice, and ultimately deepen your self-awareness and individual spiritual path.
(Image credit: Dusk Flip Smoke Strip (2007) by Ryan McGinley)
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Playing with Perception: Reconstructing the
Theatrical Canon
Fall 2015 John Kurzynowski
Hamlet. Three Sisters. A Streetcar Named Desire. These plays have managed to weave their way into the very fabric of
our artistic culture (and even society at large). Their stories have become instantly recognizable and oddly universal. The
lamenting son searching for meaning after his father's untimely death. The uprooted family of former means longing for
the glory days of their past. The broken sibling seeking refuge from the mad world around her in the arms of her sister.
These canonical stories often fall victim to a preconceived perception of how they should be presented, due largely in
part to the many iconic performances of these works that have come before, and the many interpretations and adaptions
of these plays that have been embraced by our society. Without even ever having to read the play Hamlet, most can
connect the image of a man holding a skull and the words "To be, or not to be" to the bard's most well-known play.
But what happens when we attempt to view these canonical works without any sort of preconceived perceptions of the
plays in performance, and instead rely on some sort of intuitive observation of the works, free of intellectualization?
What happens when a group of people begin to allow themselves to truly play with well-known material as though it were
new, all the while acknowledging the past we cannot escape? In Playing with Perception, we will collectively attempt to
navigate our way through a number of classical or canonical theatrical works, redefining our basic understanding of their
cultural significance by tapping into our own instinctual and intuitive perceptions of the material in play. Our altered
perceptions of some of the most well-known and established works of theater will in turn inspire us to form new
theatrical material, that may take shape in surprising and unexpected forms, in response to our collective and individual
discoveries.
Week 1 : Introduction to course and discussion of theoretical texts (Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, Freud, Critchley, and
others). Week 2 : Discussion of canonical theatrical texts, including Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Williams’ A Streetcar
Named Desire, among others. Weeks 3-4: Through a series of task-based exercises catered to the discoveries made
over the previous sessions, we will collectively begin to intuitively explore the theatrical and theoretical texts in play.
These exercises can range from creating human statues to devising elaborate scenes, from choreographing dance
phrases to creating new methods of acting, etc. Weeks 5-6: Participants will be given the opportunity to continue this
intuitive mode of exploration by bringing in task-based exercises of their own, inspired by the work of the previous two
sessions. Weeks 7-8: We will examine the work that’s been generated thus far and our newly altered perceptions of the
original source material. Based on this newly generated material, we will collectively piece together a new
performance-based work that best represents our discoveries
14
Taking Buildings Down Fall 2015 David Bench
This course is to look critically at the built environment in our landscape as it relates to economic and
power dynamics of development. Through successful grassroots efforts largely in the 1960s, community
activists have a role to play in preserving existing buildings, structures, and landscapes through a
Landmarking process. Now in its 50th year in NYC, this program has successfully saved many unique
buildings from over-development. This class is proposed to explore a corollary development process in
which citizens can propose buildings and infrastructure to remove- as removal is currently only achieved
in the expectation of some replacement as proposed by a developer or government agency. Can removal
be a design decision? Aren’t some structures better of removed? How does this concept get
incorporated into a community dialogue?
15
Lower East Side Architecture: Re-desigining Essex
Crossing
Spring 2015
David Bench
This course will look critically at the pending development in the Seward Park Urban Renewal Area
(SPURA) at Essex Crossing (Essex and Delancey) and guide participants to the formation of their own
unique vision for the site. Each student will design their own alternative proposal for Essex Crossing
which will begin with design research techniques such as site visits, historical and sociological research
and interviews with stakeholders but move quickly into massing and site design.
The challenge of design is in synthesizing complex issues into a set of forms- and should be fun! The goal
of the course is to produce innovative schemes that interrogate the prerogatives of the current
development. Models, hand drawing, and rendering techniques will be utilized (no prior experience
necessary).
Outline
-Course 1: Site Visit
-Course 2: Historical Background
-Course 3: Neighborhood Economics and Transportation
-Course 4: Presentation- the word on the street (neighborhood interviews)
-Course 5: Visual communication techniques
-Course 6: Design charette (independent)
-Course 7: Design charette (group)
-Course 8: Final presentations and next steps
16
Art and the Everyday Spring 2015 Magali Duzant and Jeanette Spicer
"The ordinary arts we practice every day at home are of more importance to the soul than their simplicity might
suggest." ~Thomas Moore
In an age when every moment is photographed, uploaded, tagged, and shared it can seem difficult to see
beyond the momentary to the momentous. Photographs no longer function as prints but files that are
added to a stream, status updates are spun into careers, and digital life is a separate, fuzzy entity from
physical life. This class looks at how artists have engaged with the ebb and flow of daily life as fodder and
inspiration for their art practices from the 1960s to now. Before the advent of reality TV, social media
and it's multiplying personalities, and smart phones as an extension of ourselves artists began to
investigate the everyday small gestures that built up and defined a life. Students will gain a deeper
knowledge of art trends of the everyday through conversations structured to pull apart the minutiae and
importance of the routine, to empower personal moments as creative growth, and to weigh the small
activities in life as insightful to the art making process.
Broken up into one week sessions we will examine the “everyday” through such topics as Meals,
Presence / Proof, Reality TV, The Banal, and Relationships and the artists who have worked with said
themes including On Kawara, Moyra Davey, Alison Knowles, Alejandro Cesarco, and Nan Goldin. Each
week will include discussions of texts related to the week's topic (ie Long Life Cool White by Moyra
Davey, an article on On Kawara's Twitter bot, and more ) as well as weekly exercises in observation, via
journals and photographic assignments culminating in a final student defined project that addresses the
theme.
17
Instagram, Food Porn and the Aesthetics of Desire: A History of Photographing Dinner Spring 2015 Rebecca Robertson
“For what is food? It is...a system of communication, a body of images, a protocol of usages, situations, and
behaviors...Food sums up and transmits a situation; it constitutes an information; it signifies.”
— Roland Barthes in “Toward a Psychosociology of Contemporary Food Consumption”
This class explores the meanings of #food culture, looking at its roots in art history and commercial
photography, its overlap with contemporary art, and its future. Combining conversation with hands-on
photography, we will attempt to understand eating as a part of a broader visual culture, especially as it
exists online today. The class consists of a lecture and class discussion using Barthes and Foucault to
examine the meanings of the growing archive of digital food photography and its relation to older images.
Participants are asked to bring a favorite 2-dimensional example of visual food culture, as well as an
interesting food item, which we will photograph and then eat as a part of a photo shoot/potluck.
18
Electronic Voices: The Physics of Sound Spring 2015 David Sheinkopf
This class aims to demystify the invisible physical phenomenon that we process as sound. We will follow
the mechanical and electrical pioneers of the 19th and 20th century as they spent sleepless nights trying
to capture the minute fluctuations in air pressure that our brain effortlessly decodes as sound.
This class will explain and re-create some of the experiments of the early sound recording pioneers and
then go on to cover the history and techniques of sound manipulation through the acoustical, electrical,
and digital eras.
In this class we will learn some the basics of early sound recording and reproduction and learn to build a
makeshift phonograph using mechanical amplification. We will then move on to discuss electronics and
electromagnetism and how they relate to recording and amplifying sound. We will eventually build a
working speaker out of a post-it note, a wire, and a magnet.
19
The Videopoem Spring 2015 Ilana Simons
As literature increasingly lives in the digital world, literature increasingly enters relationships with
images. That trend has given birth to a genre—the videopoem, a short movie that is not a typical film but
expresses a particularly lyrical relationship between poems and pictures. In this class, we will look at the
history of the videopoem from its forerunners in works from William Blake and Jan Svankmajer to the
work of modern masters like Bianca Stone and Joshua Mulligan.
Class participants can create their own short videopoems, for which they would need a camera that can
upload, like an iPhone.
This class calls poets who want to create a visual presence online and filmmakers who want to try
something more homemade than conventional.
20
Democratic Body: What would the community think? Spring 2015 Eroca Nicols
Democracy as an ideal is held high in "free society". Yet many are disillusioned with politics and do not
actively engage in political processes. What is going on here? Do any of us really know what this
concept/system really means? To what degree do any of us have embodied direct experiences of
democratic ideas/processes in action? Can we apply theories of democratic decision making to our
physical structure? Can we apply aspects of social movements to our bodies as well as to humans in
relationship to each other? If our body is the community, how can our soft tissues be part of a collective
decision making process? Is it possible to find agreement between our bones? How much of the
community can we involve in physical and social choice making?
Using these questions as a starting point, together we will research ways to make fair and reasonable, as
well as ridiculous and impossible choices, as they relate to our internal structure and to our external
interactions with other humans. How do the processes by which we make choices shift as we attempt
more and more inclusion? Perhaps in this era, where the failure of agreement has such large implications,
an embodied understanding of democracy should be something familiar, welcome and practised. Or is
this a bunch of pretentious nonsense from a couple of lowlife dance artists? Let's find out.
We anticipate many of these actions will happen during our time together: -talking -choice making
-dancing ...maybe even a phrase -walking -touching ourselves and/or other humans -choosing to do or
not do things -being frustrated with ourselves and/or others -investigating ourselves/others -screaming
-feeling weirded out -laughing -sweating -likely sitting in a circle -doing things that at first seem a bit
stupid and perhaps are
21
Race, Gender, Land Art
Fall 2014
Park McArthur
As urban unrest accelerated in accordance with domestic public policy or lack thereof, American artists
began developing a movement in the 1960s and 70s now known as Land Art. This turning towards
geology and nature, though not without a certain social conservatism and escapism, also provided
women and artists of color spaces of critique through the construction of outdoor memorials, mounds,
and living fields. In addition to permits and rights of use, an earthwork often requires the work of many
people to accomplish. As such, Land Art is highly administrative.
This class looks at how specific earthworks came to be and how artists navigate the social, economic, and
political conditions of their becoming in hopes of questioning massive outdoor sculpture being built
today, such as Richard Serra's contribution to the Brouq Nature Reserve in Western Qatar. More
specifically, this class will take an in-depth look at artists who use Land Art and its administrative
requirements to assert or critique identity. These artists include Beverly Buchanan, Michelle Stuart,
Nancy Holt, Agnes Denes, and Ana Mendieta. This consideration of individual artists' works will be
paired with close readings of texts by Lucy Lippard, Robert Smithson, and Miwon Kwon. We will also
visit and have guests present the archives of artists' works in local museums, such as Beverly Buchanan's
papers at the Whitney Museum and Michelle Stuart's works at Leslie Tonkonow Gallery. Students will
draft their own instructional documents for producing an earthwork.
Photograph- Untitled Sculpture by Beverly Buchanan- Date Unknown)
22
The Phenomenology of Shoes Fall 2014 Chris Moffett
"But what is there to see here? Everyone knows what shoes consist of… . The peasant woman wears her shoes in
the field. Only here are they what they are. They are all the more genuinely so, the less the peasant woman thinks
about the shoes… "
—Heidegger, "The Origin of the Work of Art"
Rather than thinking through actual phenomena, we often prefer to think about doing so. Even
Heidegger, in his reflections on peasant shoes, is happy enough to use Van Gogh's famous painting of
shoes as a stand in. As if actual shoes, the ones on our feet right now, are unthinkable. Indeed, since Plato,
shoes have been the very image of specialization: not just anyone can make a shoe, and conversely
shoemakers should not be tasked with something like doing philosophy. If we have to think about our
shoes, it is because something went wrong.
Of course, we never stop thinking about shoes, even when we think we are not. Cinderella's idealized
slipper fit perfectly, as if it wasn't even there. Made of glass, it is transparent, invisible, unthinkable, and
hence the perfect mechanism for obsessive searching itself. Is it because they elude us that we fetishize
them?
In this course we will attempt to think with our shoes. Working with this fundamental mediator of our
contact with the world, we may come to better understand our modern condition (shod feet being one of
the classic, but unexamined, markers of "modern" civilizations.) We'll read works of philosophy and
phenomenology, old texts on shoemaking, and new texts on ergonomics. We'll look at a lot of shoes (from
dress shoes to flip flops, high-heels to flats, ski-boots to huaraches, "five finger" shoes, running shoes,
pointy shoes, and ruby slippers.) We'll go shoe shopping, analyze shoe ads, and do shoe dissections. We'll
also look at foot structure and gait, work with our sensation, and regain intelligent feet. This course is for
a broad interdisciplinary audience. Like Heidegger's peasant woman, we all know shoes, and their effects
on us. It will be of particular interest to thinkers, designers, makers, athletes, artists, barefoot runners
and movement practitioners of all ilks.
23
Sensational Cinema: The Poetics of Experience in Film Fall 2014 John-Paul Bernbach & Heather von Rohr
Robert Bresson once said, "I'd rather people feel a film before they understand it." In this course we will
“feel” our way toward understanding ten films (contemporary and classic) that invite this kind of viewing
by loosening the grip of narrative and foregrounding the experiential nature of cinema. As we immerse
ourselves in, for example, the queasy horror of "Repulsion," the light of nature in "Days of Heaven," the
kinetic rush of "Fallen Angels," or the sensory spirituality of "Mirror," we will explore the particular
poetics at work, not only as viewers, but also as artists, practitioners, and thinkers with a vested interest
in the ways that films can move beyond the conventional language of narrative cinema to say--and
be--something individual and new.
In keeping with our focus on the experiential, we will do a variety of in-class exercises that resonate with
the films, drawing from our senses and intuition, and cultivating a spirit of playful experimentation. We
will complement our viewing with short weekly readings of film theory (Bazin, Sobchack, Deleuze...) and
philosophy (Plato, Schopenhauer, Merleau-Ponty...) to ground our own investigations into the
phenomenology of cinema, and to provide a framework for broader discussions about the nature of
meaning, experience, and spectatorship in art. Clips and screenings will include films by F. W. Murnau,
Alfred Hitchcock,Yasujiro Ozu, Jacques Tati, Roman Polanski, Andrei Tarkovsky, Agnes Varda, Terrence
Malick, Wong Kar Wai, Carlos Reygadas, Alfonso Cuaron, Josephine Decker, and others.
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Self Analysis Through Statistics: Attempting the Impossible Fall 2014 Nisse Greenberg
Those buzzfeed quizzes that help you define who you are by analyzing who you are through a series of
inane questions compiled and processed through algorithms that are kept secret from you are super fun,
but always leave you with more questions than answers. Why is the city that represents me Minneapolis?
What about me means that I am the color magenta? Why should I define myself as that specific pouty
face of Ryan Gosling looking at a puppy? In this workshop we will become the puppet masters of our own
self-analytic strings.
We will begin with an assumption about "the self": that it can only be fully explored by one's self; that the
only algorithm that can fully encapsulate the infinity of being that is "the self" is one that is recursive -
one that admits its necessary self-referential nature. We will track back through our memories following
Leibniz's concept that "every substance has as a real cause some previous state of that very substance"
and in doing so discover the variables that are important to us in our definitions of self.
We will then attempt to ascribe, first, numbers to these memories, then lines, then drawings, then ascribe
a story or a flag or some other artistic representation to epitomize our lives. In this process we will look
at how Gaussian, Binomial, Bernoulli, and Poisson distributions represent the diversity of probabilities
while simultaneously being pretty pictures. We will examine the problematic nature of defining infinite
beings through singular identities like mean or median while also attempting to do just that.
We will look at the reasoning behind the creation of linear-regression as an analysis of the nature of
relating variables to one another while attempting to create lines and scatterplots that represent some
truth of our own selves. While we will try to leave the workshop with a tangible product of statistical
analysis, my hope is that the day is simply an instigator in the process of a lifelong exploration of how
quantitative analysis can provide insight into the depths of our soul.
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Nonsense: An Applied Theory Fall 2014 Sam Corbin
This workshop offers an investigation into the matter of nonsense. What does it mean to ‘make
Nonsense’ in a world that manifests itself as the ultimate achievement of Sense? Why do wordplay,
misdirection and sleight of hand seem to stop us in our tracks, threatening the boundaries of knowledge
to some unknown beyond?
Using excerpts from the book-length essay "Nonsense" by poet/critic Susan Stewart, this class will delve
into the topsy-turvy, the deeply absurd, and explore what nonsense does to our brains when we use it to
write. We may pass through the gobbledygook of Lewis Carroll, the tomfoolery of Shakespeare and the
antics of Monty Python. We will write scenes, play with words, and test the boundaries of infinity as
defined by the language we use to perceive it.
The takeaway, among other things, is a sip from the fountain of youth—not only because of the childlike
way in which this subject encourages one to view the world, but because the act of making Nonsense is
itself a reversal of Time's arrow. It is ‘play’, ‘practice’: it ‘did not happen’.
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Cooking Creativity: The Egg Spring 2014 Kouri Killmeier & Julie Edwards
This workshop will start with each participant taking on a specific role in the kitchen assigned by Chef
Kouri Killmeier as we focus on one simple ingredient, the egg, an ingredient inspired by the limitless
directions all art forms can take. The humble egg can be transformed into an endless array of edible
masterpieces from its most simple form dancing in a pot of boiling water to a stunning display of glossy
whipped meringues and the never disappointing sultry texture of a perfectly prepared creme brûlée.
After our inspiring experience in the kitchen, Julie Edwards will facilitate a discussion to propel us
forward into creating our own art work based off of the inspirations we had from working in the kitchen.
We invite dancers, poets, writers, singers, visual artists, actors, film makers and artists of all kinds to join
us and allow the food and kitchen experience to inform and translate into your respective art form.
Dance like an egg boiling, write like the energy that's in the room when many people work together to
create a single dish, recite like a chef with a specific and heartfelt vision.
Kouri and Julie are excited for the opportunity to let new art forms inform their own. Join us in the
realization that something that is seemingly simple can be limitless.
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Magical Storytelling in Film and Drawing Spring 2014 Juliana Cerqueira Leite & Josephine Decker
In this course, we will investigate how films support their stories through specific visual choices and editing techniques, and we will use the films we watch as jumping off points to guide our own hands-on, artistic explorations. In our sessions, we will tie a great work of fantastic visual storytelling -- Rosemary’s Baby, Babe, The Fifth Element, The General -- to a drawing exercise that will explore and explode the themes of the film. Film director Josephine Decker will lead a discussion about how the filmmakers’ visual choices and editing techniques enhance the film’s central narrative and themes. Juliana Leite will lead us through our weekly drawing and collage experiments exploring themes of transformation, futurism, and surprise/suspense. Juliana will offer a brief history of how time and space have been conveyed in the visual arts and its changing relationship to storytelling, and Josephine will link each film’s techniques to techniques from other filmmakers, bridging Hitchcock with Kubrick with Leos Carax. Materials to bring: -drawing pencils: any of your liking, we recommend 2B, 2H and 6B -scissors (for cutting paper) -markers, crayons, colored pencils, watercolors, brushes or any other materials you enjoy working with. -a sketch pad. We will provide students with card, glue, and collage materials.
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The Magick Circumstantial Spring 2014 Alan Ramón Clinton
Like echoes from infinity drawn out
Into a dappled unison of light,
Beyond the dawn of day or dead of night,
All scents, all sounds and colors correlate.
-Charles Baudelaire, “Correspondences”
In his autobiographical novel Mad Love (1936), Surrealist André Breton declared that beauty would be
“magic-circumstantial, or it will not be.” To describe the magic-circumstantial, Breton references a time
when, while sitting in a café, he had the premonition that an unknown woman writing in the corner was in
fact writing a letter to him, a premonition which turned out to be true. This woman, Jacqueline Lamba,
eventually became his wife.
What is at stake then is the cultivation of an awareness of our intuitions and a call to pursue them,
however irrational they may seem to us at the time. By adding a “K” at the end of Breton’s coinage, we
recall Aleister Crowley’s term to differentiate magic in general from the magick of practice, to be invoked
in a more willful fashion designed to operate in everyday life.
While in this seminar we may talk about the relationships between these two traditions, I hope to spend
the majority of our time producing correspondences between one another, with the aid of divination
techniques including the tarot, the I-Ching, and various forms of bibliomancy (divination with books) in
order to imagine other possibilities for our writing. Ideally, each participant will “put things to the test,” in
both individual and collaborative exercises, imagining, at least today, their work as “a possibility” with
energies that may extend to other lives and worlds. One need not be a “writer” or “artist” to participate,
and if anyone is interested in exploring these concepts, I will also bring several short poems for people to
work with. I am more interested in suggesting new practices to be expanded upon in one’s own future
research than in producing “quality work” this day, quality being a term that doesn’t necessarily apply to
magick or, for that matter, “making thinking.”
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Neuroaesthetics as Performance (or, This is Your Brain on Art) Spring 2014 Adam Thompson
This course will offer a brief foundation in the field of neuroaesthetics - the study of the brain's response
to creative experience, followed by a practical application of the field to the creation of interdisciplinary
live performance. Participants will explore the history and evolution of creativity from game playing and
survival mechanism through contemporary biological views of creative activity. Students will choose and
study a function of the brain and collaboratively build and present a short performance piece modeled on
and exploring the relationship between the from and role of the selected function. Inspiration will be
drawn from scientific texts, novels, essays, films, and theatre and students will cooperate to bring one
another's work to life. This course aims to bridge the fields of science and art by blending and blurring the
lines between rehearsal room and research laboratory.
Readings will include: Neurocinematics: The Neuroscience of Film by Uri Hasson, Ohad Landesman,
Barbara Knappmeyer, Ignacio Vallines, Nava Rubin, and David J. Heeger; selections from Proust was a
Neuroscientist by Jonah Lehrer; selections from The Wavesby Virgina Woolf; selections from To the
Lighthouse by Virgina Woolf; The Cinemaby Virginia Woolf; selections from Splendors and Miseries of
the Brainby Semir Zeki; Statement on Neuroaesthetics by Semir Zeki; The Science of Artby V.S.
Ramachandran and William Hirstein
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Urban Drifting: Theory and Practice of the Dérive Spring 2014 Chris Moffett
“ONE OF THE BASIC situationist practices is the dérive [literally: “drifting”], a technique of rapid passage
through varied ambiances. Dérives involve playful-constructive behavior and awareness of psychogeographical
effects, and are thus quite different from the classic notions of journey or stroll.”
—Guy Debord, “Theory of the Dérive”
We move through cities. It is largely what we do.
What are we doing when we do what we do? And what happens when we take it on as a technique or
practice? In this course we will situate ourselves to the history and theory of the dérive, attempting to
feel out what this strange moment of Debord and the Situationist International has to offer us today: its
momentum, its surprises still.
In addition to winding our way into texts, we will also establish a working practice of individual and
collective drifting, seeing if we can find ways to follow something of our experiences. Availing ourselves,
absurdly, of “classic” dérives, we will also see what new directions make themselves known. Suitable for
intrigued denizens of the city, this course is not a course, but a course. Coursing.
Weaving between texts, images, maps, somatic practices, our skeletons, sidewalks, subways, tight
passages, rooftops, SMS messages, writing and other recordings, we will feel our collective way.
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Becoming Philosopher(s) Spring 2014 Aaron Finbloom
Becoming Philosopher(s) is an intro course to philosophy with a twist - instead of focusing on philosophical concepts and texts, we will use these to help us enact the methods and lived practices of each philosopher we study. From engaging in Socratic public dialectics in the "marketplace," to constructing Cartesian meditations, to writing Nietzschean aphorisms, each class will be an opportunity to become a philosopher by creatively interpreting their way of philosophizing. By the end of the course each student will come away with a physical or electronic "booklet" containing documentation of each philosophical becoming they have performed. Philosophers we will become include Socrates, Plato, Hellenistic Philosophers, Descartes, Kierkegaard/Nietzsche, Heidegger and Deleuze.
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Mystics Spring 2014 Benjamin Korta
We can make our minds so like still water that beings gather about us that they may see, it may be, their own
images, and so live for a moment with a clearer, perhaps even with a fiercer life because of our quiet.
- W.B. Yeats
Step by step you go into the dark. The movement itself is the only truth.
- from Ingmar Bergman’s The Magician
Mysticism is a marriage of strange, contradictory beauty. As an experience, it is intimate encounter with
mystery. As a text, it struggles to convey this mystery, sometimes to the brink of impossibility and
paradox. As a practice, it is the ever-refined integration of the ordinary with the extraordinary.
In this course, we will examine mystics and mysticism from a number of perspectives, both theoretical
and experiential. Writers from classical mystical and contemplative traditions – Christian, Sufi, and
Zen/Daoist – will be explored alongside experimental meditation and writing practice. Modern authors
such as Thomas Merton, C.G. Jung, Mircea Eliade, and Simone Weil will also be surveyed.
Our study together will aim to ground the challenging themes of the mystic inside the context of
everyday life. At the same time, we will engage – perhaps even enhance – our uncertainty without
seeking its resolution, asking instead how obscurity, absence, and the unknown can become privileged
sites of opening. In this way, we will discover mysticism as a positive form of getting lost: each tradition a
certain mode or style of luminous disorientation.
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Math: An Empowering Manipulation of Collective Perceptions of the Natural World Fall 2013 Nisse Greenberg
Math is a utopian language world that is in no way representative of the world we live in. This utopian
world does have a function: it helps us to relate our world to some objective metaphor land where life
can be compared, described, conveyed without the harmful pesterings of bias and subjectivity. Math
does not attempt to exist in the real; math exists as our fantasy of what the world could be if we started
from scratch and re-created everything all over again. Math is our exploration of that starting from
scratch. In this class we will explore this "scratch" by both inventing math anew and discovering the
maths invented by ancient civilizations.
Each class will be divided into two parts. The first part will be an open discussion format where we
"invent" mathematics. We will operate within a fictitious world where no mathematical concepts exist
and we will try to answer the unanswerable questions. For example, we can't have a discussion about
how hot it is out without figuring out a method of measurement. Over the 8 weeks we will continue the
discussion until we've built a method of mathematics to deal with the world. The second part of class will
be researching how various ancient civilizations discovered/inventing mathematics. This second part of
the course will work alongside "A Compact History of Infinity" by David Foster Wallace.
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Thinking through the Body-Subject: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology and the Alexander Technique Fall 2013 Julie Edwards and Benjamin Korta
The body is an open form, an active becoming. To be embodied is to be both subject and object, inner and
outer, sensing and sensed, and therefore to subvert those abstract dualities we have inherited from the
Western philosophical tradition and which continue to influence, often unconsciously, our activity in the
world. Our aim in this course will be to live this open form and to trace this becoming. Using the
Alexander Technique and Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of the body as our guides, we will
invite our students to live and question the world from the perspective of their embodiment.
Along with solo and group exercises in the Alexander Technique, we will investigate key notions
developed by philosopher Maurice Merleau-Ponty. Through this combined momentum of mind/body
practice and philosophical inquiry, we will explore fundamental but often overlooked features of our
experience – such as weight, breath, speech, sight, and touch – and thereby find these dimensions not
only investigated conceptually but reawakened perceptually. Each class will thus explore a given bodily
dimension both experientially and theoretically, pairing an Alexander practice with a parallel concept in
Merleau-Ponty.
Though guided by these twin traditions of the body, our course will not be confined by them. Like the
body itself, our method will include improvisation and be geared toward direct encounter with the world
around ourselves. In engaging the body at this deepened level, we aim to rediscover – beneath the
sedimentation of accustomed actions and concepts – our primitive and first-order contact with the
world.
About Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Maurice Merleau-Ponty was a French philosopher working in the
phenomenological tradition. His innovative descriptions of embodiment and its role in perceptual
experience have had an important influence on a range of contemporary conversation and inquiry,
including philosophy of mind, cognitive science, art, and ecology. About F.M. Alexander and the
Alexander Technique: The Alexander Technique was founded by Frederick Matthias Alexander in the
early twentieth century as an education on the "use" of the self. The Alexander Technique acknowledges
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psychophysical unity and invites its students to consciously participate with their actions and reactions
to stimuli in the most easeful and anatomically sound way.
Psychoanalytic Psychotherapy Fall 2013 Lauren Siegel
"A man should not strive to eliminate his complexes, but to get into accord with them; they are legitimately what
directs his conduct in the world." --Sigmund Freud
Psychoanalytic psychotherapy is an art form whose aim is to promote one’s accessibility to unconscious
instruments such as metaphor, reverie, association, and impulses so as to breathe mobility into ones
psychic life. This course will be an experiential tour through this process. The structure of the course will
dynamically oscillate between "classroom" (a student/teacher relationship) and "group therapy" (a
patient/therapist relationship). The syllabus will develop organically out of this process as an article will
be assigned following each group session that will frame the meaning which we will have created.
Articles will be reviewed and discussed every other class. Through academic articles, class discussion,
therapy, object gathering, and writing, a proper and radical tutorial of psychoanalytic psychotherapy will
be provided. My hope is that this course will explode students' rational selves to make way for primitive
glory.
“Shit on your whole mortifying, imaginary, and symbolic theater!” –Gilles Deleuze